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Rational Security

The “Trashed on Trash Mountain” Edition

Rational Security

The Lawfare Institute

Foreignpolicy, Nationalsecurity, News, Government, Politics, Middleeast

4.82K Ratings

🗓️ 19 December 2024

⏱️ 82 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week, Scott sat down with his Lawfare colleagues Anna Bower and Natalie Orpett and Lawfare Contributing Editor Michel Paradis to talk about the week’s biggest national security news stories, including:

  • “A Justice Delayed Still Has Justice on the Mind.” After weeks of waiting, New York state court judge Justice Juan Merchan has finally become the first judge to apply the Supreme Court’s Trump v. United States immunity decision, holding that incoming President Donald Trump’s convictions under New York state law may stand and did not unduly rely on conduct for which he is immune. How persuasive is his ruling? And what can it tell us about the future of both Donald Trump’s criminal case and the Supreme Court’s immunity holding?
  • “A Break in the Case.” Tectonic shifts in Syrian politics over the past few weeks that has led, among other consequences, to the release of thousands of former prisoners, have brought back to the fore the case of Austin Tice, an American journalist who has been missing in Syria for more than a decade. Believed to have been held by the Assad regime before its collapse, some are concerned that he might have been injured or killed during Israeli airstrikes over the past several weeks. What does Tice’s case tell us about the challenges of wrongful detention cases like his? And what should we make of allegations that the Biden administration is not doing enough to bring him back?
  • “Gym, Tan, Low-flying Unmanned Aerial Vehicles.” The state of New Jersey has a new signature activity, as Americans and politicians of all stripes have been voicing concern over reports of mysterious drones of unknown origins operating in the state’s skies. What might explain this phenomenon? And what should we make of the reactions around it? 

For object lessons, Anna recommended “Intermezzo,” by Sally Rooney as a read over the holiday. Natalie Orpett endorsed Washington, D.C.’s Eastern Market as a worthwhile visit for holiday shopping, and Scott doubled down with another local recommendation of Middleburg, VA, as a holiday wonderland not to be missed. And Michel wrapped things up with a final endorsement of Weike Wang’s dryly comedic book “Rental House,” for those needing to commiserate over managing family relations over the holiday.

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Transcript

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0:00.7

So we are at the end of the year.

0:02.9

Obviously, there's news happening.

0:04.4

There's big stories, although a lot of things are on hold because the transition and everything else.

0:07.9

Anna, you are, you know, a hard-bitten news journalist at this point.

0:11.3

And what are you obsessing over as they come to the end of the calendar year?

0:15.0

Well, look, Scott, even some journalists who are into, you know, the hard-hitting news and investigative pieces,

0:25.7

sometimes have to get their fill of slub gossip. So I'm kind of obsessing over the Selena Gomez,

0:32.7

Benny Blanco. I think that's his name, Blanco? Bini Blanco, engagement. It's such a cool name for such an uncool-looking individual, but yes, I believe that's his name.

0:41.1

I know.

0:42.2

And one reason that I'm obsessing over this engagement is, A, because the pictures that Selena Gomez

0:50.7

has put on Instagram, I'm like, what was this engagement?

0:54.4

Because it's like a picnic with like Taco Bell.

0:57.9

It looks like he maybe got them Taco Bell.

1:01.2

He proposed like while they're eating burritos.

1:05.9

But the other reason that I'm kind of obsessed with this is because I am from a small town in

1:14.6

north rural Georgia. And there's a family there that then moved to California and somehow

1:23.2

randomly became best friends with Selena Gomez. So these girls that like went to my rival

1:29.8

high school in this small town in Georgia are now posting about how they went to go surprise

1:36.7

Selena after she got engaged. And my sisters and I just think it's like the wildest

1:43.2

connection to a celebrity because we're just

1:46.9

like, how did these women become best friends with Selena Gomez?

1:51.1

It's kind of like one of those worlds colliding kind of things.

...

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